
βLa Grangeβ may mean βbarnβ in French, but itβs not too friendly a place for feathered farm animals.
Jeff Cogelja is on a mission to change that.Β
Cogelja plans to continue his fight to amend the village code to allow chickens in La Grange by standing Monday night before the newly shaped Village Board.
βIβm hoping with a new president and one new board member maybe the odds will be on my side this time,β he said.
Cogelja housed four hensΒ in a backyard chicken coopΒ last yearΒ for seven months before the board forced him to send his birds elsewhere in November.Β
Trustees said that they didnβt like the image chickens projected for La Grange.
βThatβs such a bunch of crap,β Cogelja said. βItβs not like it degrades the village. Weβre not talking a farm. Weβre talking a few little hens.β
Former Village President Liz Asperger said during an October board meeting thatΒ trustees polled their neighbors and received a βconsiderably negativeβ response. Residents worried about noise, odor and disease, among other issues, she said.
βThere were lots of reasons given β¦ they relate some to what are likely realities and some that are simply perception,β Asperger said. βThe most important fact that has swayed the majority of our board is that the majority of the feedback individuals received was negative. β
Other board members thought it wasnβt worth the time and effort needed to enact a new ordinance. Two trustees supported researching the issue further.
But according to Cogelja, heβs not the only La Grange resident whoβs part of the pro-poultry movement. Four or five other homeowners play host to contraband chickens, he said.Β
The hens made very little noise in his yard, Cogelja said, and neither smelled nor harbored disease. (βYouβre more likely to get a disease from a bird dropping its poo in your backyard than from my chickens that are in a coop,β he said.)
Cogelja gathered about 340 signatures on a petition over the holidays but fell shy of the 500 needed to get a referendum on the April ballot.Β
If the new board refuses to open discussion on an ordinance, Cogelja said heβll try again. His high-school age daughter adamantly wants him to continue his pursuit, for one thing.Β
Raising chickens for fresh eggs also fits into the familyβs overall goal of sustainable livingβthey compost or recycle nearly everything, throwing out one can of garbage every two weeks, and maintain an organic garden that includesΒ both flowers and vegetables.
Cogelja hasnβt seen his four hens in the seven months since the village nixed the arrangement.Β
A woman who lives in Lisle took in the chickens and established a relationship akin to an open adoptionβCogelja can visit anytime he wants, and if La Grange ever changes its ordinances, he can bring the birds back home.
But seeing them at this point is just too emotional, he said.
βI actually got really attached,β he said. βI raised them from day-old chicks. I want to go, and at the same time, itβs hard to go because if something happened to themβ¦β Cogelja was silent for a beat.
βI think about them all the time,β he said, βespecially because the chicken coop is still in my backyard.βΒ
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